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Thursday, September 4, 2008

Intel-Micron JV delays Singapore chip plant

The Singapore factory is the JV’s fourth facility and its first plant outside the US

Singapore: An Intel-Micron joint venture (JV) will delay the start of production at its Singapore wafer fabrication plant by six months to mid-2009 because of weak market conditions, an executive said on Monday.
IM Flash Technologies Llc. had been expected in December to start making NAND flash memory chips, widely used in digital cameras and mobile phones, at its Singapore plant. The firm is a manufacturing JV formed by Intel Corp. and Micron Technology Inc.
“The NAND market has plummeted, pricing declines have been the trend and supply has outrun demand,” Rodney Morgan, co-executive officer of IM Flash Technologies, said on the sidelines of a conference, adding that these market conditions were the primary reason behind the production delay. 
Research firm iSuppli Corp. estimates that average prices of NAND chips have slumped by 36% in the first quarter of this year, and are expected to fall 13% in the second quarter. It predicts that NAND prices could stabilize by mid-year.
The Singapore factory is the JV’s fourth facility and its first plant outside the US. It will make 50-nanometre flash memory chips from 12-inch silicon wafers.
One nanometre, which refers to the gap between transistors on a chip, is one-billionth of a metre. The more transistors that can be included, the more powerful the chip and the higher the profit margins.
“We expect a slight impact on supply as a result of the delay,” Morgan said.
Construction of the Singapore factory began in April last year and the firm expects to move in equipment in September. It employs about 800 staff.
Morgan declined to disclose the capacity of the plant, but said full capacity production would begin within a year from the start of output.
He also declined to disclose the cost of building the Singapore factory, but said it was 20-30% cheaper than building a similar plant in any another location.
The electronics sector produces one-third of Singapore’s factory output, but some manufacturers have moved to cheaper locations such as China and Vietnam.

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